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openSUSE 11.2 Final Released

11-12-2009, 09:50 AM

Phoronix: openSUSE 11.2 Final Released

Coming in between the releases of Ubuntu 9.10 and Fedora 12 is openSUSE 11.2, which is available as of this morning. The openSUSE 11.2 desktop is now using KDE 4.3 by default (though GNOME 2.28 is also available), OpenOffice.org 3.1 integration, the Linux 2.6.31 kernel, and many other underlying advancements.Novell sent over a gold master copy of openSUSE 11.2 earlier this week, which we have been playing around with, and overall this appears to be a nice openSUSE release...

Overall, I would project the experience to be a very good one with OpenSUSE 11.2. I personally cannot wait to install it later on today, hopefully it all goes smoothly. I had nothing but problems when I tried 9.10, it just seems like every Ubuntu release gets buggier and buggier, but hey, to each their own.

In short, it makes packaging software easier, and easier to get the newest versions of the software if I read it correctly, instead of having to wait for new openSUSE releases to get new versions of your favorite stuff.

Comment

I still have a lot to learn about linux in general and have mainly been using Ubuntu (some CentOS at work, but only as a user)..

Could you explain what this build service is (in linux-novice terms)? I'm downloading the KDE live cd now for trying it out, so it's nice to know where the differences are to be found!

It has a very nice structure: you can have recent packages of the software you care for, while keeping all the other packages stable.

For example if you want newer versions of the X-Server you just add the XOrg:X11 repository to the repository list in YaST and you have a newer X-Server, which means you don't have to wait for the next distribution release (in 8 months) until you have that new software.

It is very useful for developers since it allows them t package for different distros.

The main thing GNOME-wise would be YaST an all-in-one setup utility which provide nice GUIs for configuring anything you can think of (so you don't need to drop to command line or edit config files YaST does it all for you).

Nice way of importing new repositories (even third-party and community ones) and gnuPG keys that they are signed with (you have to do that manually in Ubuntu as far as I'm aware).

If you don't find the package in the repos you're suscribed to, there is the build service.

And the "1 click Installer" is kind of neat. You just click a button online which will start an istaller (automatically select the repo, pull the packages you need and install them all in a nice GUI)

And there's the SLAB menu, which fucntions sort of like the Win "Start Menu"